Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Argh, she got AirPods and managed to not lose them for 8 months. Then we replaced and she managed to leave them at an event within 2 months.
I am loathe to get her another pair even if that is her only gift (that was her only Xmas and birthday gift each time).
I try to let her get by with some target $15 earbuds but she says they are uncomfortable (i think they just look uncool).
Tell me how your teens don’t lose them?!
Not just teens. I’ve lost three pair in a couple of months. I lost mine so I “borrowed” my husbands. Lost those so I borrowed my sons. Lost those. I replaced them all. I then tried a system to try and remember where they are and I lost my most recent pair. I take them out when shopping and am at the register or talking to someone and then don’t remember where I put them.
I buy the older AirPods because I keep losing them. My husband just got my 6th grader the $250 pair. We’ll see how that goes although I always call on her when I can’t find something and if it’s in the house she finds it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Argh, she got AirPods and managed to not lose them for 8 months. Then we replaced and she managed to leave them at an event within 2 months.
I am loathe to get her another pair even if that is her only gift (that was her only Xmas and birthday gift each time).
I try to let her get by with some target $15 earbuds but she says they are uncomfortable (i think they just look uncool).
Tell me how your teens don’t lose them?!
Not just teens. I’ve lost three pair in a couple of months. I lost mine so I “borrowed” my husbands. Lost those so I borrowed my sons. Lost those. I replaced them all. I then tried a system to try and remember where they are and I lost my most recent pair. I take them out when shopping and am at the register or talking to someone and then don’t remember where I put them.
I buy the older AirPods because I keep losing them. My husband just got my 6th grader the $250 pair. We’ll see how that goes although I always call on her when I can’t find something and if it’s in the house she finds it.
Anonymous wrote:Argh, she got AirPods and managed to not lose them for 8 months. Then we replaced and she managed to leave them at an event within 2 months.
I am loathe to get her another pair even if that is her only gift (that was her only Xmas and birthday gift each time).
I try to let her get by with some target $15 earbuds but she says they are uncomfortable (i think they just look uncool).
Tell me how your teens don’t lose them?!
Anonymous wrote:Stop buying them, she has a cheap pair for out of the house and only uses them at home or stop complaining. The cheap pairs are fine.
Anonymous wrote:Teach your kids good habits!!! I have ADHD and I rarely lose or misplace things. Because I am more prone to losing things or being distracted mid-task, I have systems and habits to prevent losing or breaking important or expensive items.
I started with my kids in early elementary school with water bottles, “special gloves” that matched a unique color winter coat, etc. I buy nice things that my kids like. We’ve lost 1 water bottle, 1 cheap digital watch, and 0 gloves/sweatshirts/jackets/hats in 10 years of parenting - and it was ME who left the water bottle behind at a restaurant.
Right now my kids have Amazon knock-off Apple Watches. If they wear them daily and don’t lose or break them for 1 full year, they will get a real Apple Watch for 5th grade. 6 months in, it’s going well.
As a kid who DID lose things and get in trouble with my parents, I know that learning how to take care of things is not something that kids just know without being taught.
Anonymous wrote:Teach your kids good habits!!! I have ADHD and I rarely lose or misplace things. Because I am more prone to losing things or being distracted mid-task, I have systems and habits to prevent losing or breaking important or expensive items.
I started with my kids in early elementary school with water bottles, “special gloves” that matched a unique color winter coat, etc. I buy nice things that my kids like. We’ve lost 1 water bottle, 1 cheap digital watch, and 0 gloves/sweatshirts/jackets/hats in 10 years of parenting - and it was ME who left the water bottle behind at a restaurant.
Right now my kids have Amazon knock-off Apple Watches. If they wear them daily and don’t lose or break them for 1 full year, they will get a real Apple Watch for 5th grade. 6 months in, it’s going well.
As a kid who DID lose things and get in trouble with my parents, I know that learning how to take care of things is not something that kids just know without being taught.
Anonymous wrote:Argh, she got AirPods and managed to not lose them for 8 months. Then we replaced and she managed to leave them at an event within 2 months.
I am loathe to get her another pair even if that is her only gift (that was her only Xmas and birthday gift each time).
I try to let her get by with some target $15 earbuds but she says they are uncomfortable (i think they just look uncool).
Tell me how your teens don’t lose them?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let her buy them herself. I absolutely would not buy another pair.
What does buy it herself mean when she doesn’t work? She just ask for them as her one gift from family for Xmas or birthday. So instead of a couple of checks from aunts and uncles we just get airbuds
I just want her to stop losing them! I think a purse would help or something like that to make them “bigger”.
Get an airtag. How is this difficult?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let her buy them herself. I absolutely would not buy another pair.
What does buy it herself mean when she doesn’t work? She just ask for them as her one gift from family for Xmas or birthday. So instead of a couple of checks from aunts and uncles we just get airbuds
I just want her to stop losing them! I think a purse would help or something like that to make them “bigger”.